Manhunt

Traces the heroic efforts of a young Assistant U.S. Attorney to organize a case against, and engineer the capture of, renegade CIA agent Edwin Wilson, whose machinations reached far into the intelligence establishment

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Sida 71Mulcahy acquitted himself so well that three weeks after he had started at
Consultants International, Wilson said he wanted him to meet a guy named Frank
Terpil, and they walked the couple of blocks to Terpil's office at 1625 R Street.

Sida 117Barcella had taken the week off, his first vacation in three years, so they told
Propper what they wanted and were floored to hear him say that if anything was
to be done regarding Wilson, it would be on solicitation to commit murder and ...

Sida 221In all his scams, Reiser had wanted either to get something or to save himself
from something. Now with Wilson, they came together nicely: duck a possible jail
sentence and retrieve his passport. The trick would be to take Wilson where he ...

Manhunt

Användarrecension - Not Available - Book Verdict

If the story of Edwin Wilson, the ex-CIA agent who came to serve Muammar el-Qaddafi as a freewheeling dealer in explosives and the technologies and tactics of terror, were laid before a reader as ...Läs hela recensionen

Om författaren (1986)

Peter Maas was born in New York on June 27, 1929. He graduated from Duke University in 1949 and served in the U. S. Navy during the Korean War. After the war, he became a journalist and wrote for such magazines as Collier's, Look, Saturday Evening Post, and New York Magazine. His nonfiction works include Marie, Manhunt, and Underboss. The Valachi Papers and Serpico were adapted into films. He died on August 23, 2001 at the age of 72.